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Sign of the times?

March 27: Here from the link on Fujifilm Australia story? See Readers Comments at end of this feature…

A photo store/portrait studio based in a small town in the UK has experienced phenomenal sales growth recently, with the owner attributing the success almost entirely to the use of digital signage to promote its services.

PeteThe story of Peter Davies (pictured right) and his Marlborough Photo Services store (Marlborough has a population of 10,000) was reported in a recent DIMAcast interview conducted by industry consultant Bill McCurry.

Results included a 700 percent increase in photo mugs, and a 500 percent increase in mouse pads and drink coasters, and overall Christmas sales  that ‘beat all expectations’.

‘We noticed that the poster signage that we have had traditionally for the last 20 years was just not being noticed by the customers any more,’ said Mr Davies, adding that he could have been offering 10 pound notes on a poster and it wouldn’t have been taken up ‘because people just don’t read static signage any more.’

Instead he has an array of nine small screens which run 24 hours a day advertising the store’s services.

The array of three screens feature, from left to right: work created in the studio; capabilities to produce photographic products from social media; and products and services available in store.
The array of three screens feature, from left to right: work created in the studio; capabilities to produce photographic products from social media and smartphones; and products and services available in store. (Pic: Bill McCurry)

There are actually three sets of three screens which are running off three PCs. One set of screen are in the shop window, another set fits comfortably into the stores frames display area, while the third is nearer the sales counter..

Beyond the photo mug results (which though impressive are not going to save a struggling business by themselves) Peter Davies attributes his best Christmas by far in 20 years of trading – with increased sales in services across the board – to the digital signage, along with (Australian-developed)  Fujfilm Imagine software and a new dry lab.

Mr Davies enjoys the support of Fujifilm in the UK in the digital signage project, with Fujifilm changing content remotely for Marlborough Photo Services. Messages are changed to address seasonal events like Christmas, Mother’s Day, Valentines Day, etc.

‘[Fujifilm] does it all for me and remotes in with new content, so I do very little these days,’ said Mr Davies.

‘We always have one screen constantly showing in-store products, whether it’s photos, photo gifts…. We have one screen constantly showing work we have recently produced in the studio.’

Another screen is used to promote the fact that the store can produce work from Facebook accounts, Picassa, Instagram etc. ‘People are beginning to really switch onto social media and realising that we can produce images, products prints and photo gifts from all these different sources.’

Marlborough Photo Services is also disproving the commonly-held belief that younger people will not print photos.

‘We’ve got youngsters coming in for the first time so they can hook up to their and their friend’s Facebook accounts so they can print directly from those.

‘I have to say it’s the digital signage that is the real driving force – 24 hours a day it repeats the message that we want customers to see.’

But how can he be so certain the signage is the ‘driving force’?

The shopfront window consists of small panes which lend themselves to displaying smaller screens.
The shopfront window consists of small panes which lend themselves to displaying smaller screens. (Pic: Bill McCurry)

‘Because I’m a small businessman I’m often here late at night and I can see people when they come out of the pub, the restaurants…they all stop and look and they all talk about it, because I can hear them through the window.’

The dramatic increase in sales has been achieved at full margins, too, with no discounting at all over the successful Christmas period.

Marlborough Photo Services’ success also challenges the notion that soft display has, or will eventually, see off real photos. That photographs will die out with the Baby Boomer generation.

Could it be that photo retailing has fallen into to a bit of a trough in assuming that the lack of interest in photographs is a permanent change in society, rather than simply a result of a lack of awareness of what can actually be achieved in 2014?

‘We take pictures of our new children, our families, birthdays, Christmases, all of these occasions are going to resonate within a family and to the family members that aren’t able to travel to those events and occasions. It means that they can still get a copy and people still want a copy on the sideboard, they don’t just want to have a soft copy on their phone or in their email or on their iPad,’ concluded Peter Davies.

Footnote: Bill McCurry, a regular visitor to Australia, specifically requested that Photo Counter share this particular success story with our readership:

Marl2‘I don’t normally promote DIMAcasts beyond the normal info that PMA puts out, but this is an exception,’ he wrote. ‘I heard about this studio/lab that had an outstanding Christmas season. On a fluke I picked up the phone to call the guy. I caught him between clients and he had a small break in his schedule that day.

‘It was one of the most educational interviews I’ve ever done. Marlborough Photo’s success is brilliant in its simplicity…. Pete’s commitment to do digital display in a unique way paid off in December and its payoff continues to this day. Pete is not shy about doing things a bit differently. Your readers can implement ideas from Pete that will greatly accelerate their sales velocity. This studio is in a small town between London and Bristol.

‘Imagine if an Australian retailer from a larger market adapted Pete’s ideas . . . how many dollars could they gain?’

To access the full interview, click here and scroll to DIMAcast 380, March 3.

 

 

 

4 Comments

  1. Chris H Chris H March 14, 2014

    You don’t need a pc, just tvs, & works out cheaper.

  2. PG PG March 17, 2014

    Another great example of what FujiFilm is doing for independents in the UK and more especially in the US.

    The US have so much understanding of the independents and their empathy is nothing short of sensational.

    http://www.photobusinessbuilders.com/

    They choose not to abandon those loyal customers who had supported them over the many years up to and through this century. I am surprised that the Japanese have allowed such loyalty to go unrewarded in Australia by Dave.

  3. Alan Alan March 18, 2014

    I support what PG has said.
    Fujifilm in the US is a totally different company to Fujifilm Australia.
    I don’t care what anyone say, they support the independents in the states way better than what they do here.
    Yet they manage to maintain a balance between the big guys and the little guys. Here in Oz, there is NO balance – its the bigs guys, and no one else.
    Its great to see the type of support that the US get being given to the UK – kind of makes you wonder what is different about Australia?

  4. Tim Tim March 18, 2014

    Chris H, PG and Alan are all right. But this is a no brainer, to make life easier for retailers our suppliers should give us quality POS assets to use as a continual way of updating our stores. And many suppliers do.

    In the old days they had to print thousands of posters, now it is just some good videos or POS in the cloud.
    Quick download to USB and away we go!

    Cost pretty well minimal. It just had to be good stuff that works.

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